MARTINEZ — Jurors on Monday convicted a former at-home caretaker of second-degree murder for fatally stabbing a disabled 70-year-old woman in her Pleasant Hill home last year.

Diane Warrick, 57, faces a minimum sentence of 16 years to life in prison for killing retired state social worker Mary Jane Scanlon. Warrick will be sentenced April 17.

Warrick testified last week that she was hallucinating that she was fighting her abusive father when she attacked Scanlon as the woman lay in bed waiting for breakfast June 23. Assistant public defender Terri Mockler argued the crime called for a manslaughter conviction.

Warrick told employees of a See’s Candies store that she was going to get her revenge against Scanlon, according to prosecutor Jason Peck, who sought a first-degree murder verdict. Warrick had expressed anger that she had to clean up after her Scanlon’s pets and wasn’t allowed to park her RV in front of the home.

Warrick was an unlicensed caretaker hired by Scanlon through an online listing on Craigslist six months before the killing, and lived with the woman for four months.

Scanlon had been disabled for most of her life and experienced paralysis in much of her body. Defensive wounds showed she tried to fight back with her right arm; her left arm and both legs were paralyzed.

The trial judge deemed inadmissible any reference to Warrick’s past criminal history, which includes a shootout with police at Napa State Hospital in 1997 during an attempted pharmacy robbery.

The Napa County court found Warrick not guilty by reason of insanity for that incident and had her committed. Another state hospital released her to an outpatient program in 2002 despite arguments from a Napa prosecutor who believed Warrick still posed a danger.

Intuitive Surgical paid $30.4 million in cash on March 5 for a more than three-decade-old building about two blocks from its current headquarters, which are on Kifer Road in Sunnyvale, according to Santa Clara County property records.

House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., said in a letter sent Thursday to White House Counsel Pat Cipollone that the administration has failed to produce documents tied to Kushner and other officials despite requests from the committee since 2017.